Tuesday, August 1, 2017

Musing – Did the “Binding of Isaac” foretell the Passion of Christ?



Hebraic Musing – Did the “Binding of Isaac” foretell the Passion of Christ?
In our traditional Christian teachings, the well-known account of the “binding of Isaac” in Genesis 22 has been the ultimate picture of Abraham’s faith   Abraham was faced with a “Paradox of Obedience” but he listened and obeyed God and thus earned a place in the “Faith” chapter in Hebrews -- “By faith Abraham, when God tested him, offered Isaac as a sacrifice. He who had received the promises was about to sacrifice his one and only son, even though God had said to him, "It is through Isaac that your offspring will be reckoned."    Abraham reasoned that God could raise the dead, and figuratively speaking, he did receive Isaac back from death.  Hebrews 11:17-19  NIV
Instead of dwelling on Abraham’s faith, let’s look at this event from Isaac’s perspective.  How many the parallels are there between Isaac’s role and the passion of Jesus Christ?
1.         Heavenly messengers announced their coming AND gave them their names
2.         Both represent miraculous births
3.         Both Jesus and Isaac represent their father’s only son being sacrificed
4.         The location of both sacrifices is at the same place – Mount Moriah
5.         Donkeys carry each of them to the place of their sacrificial death
6.         Both resurrected on the third day - Isaac returned (Gen.22:4); Jesus arose
7.         Both carried the wood to be used for their sacrifice
8.         Both demonstrated that one life can be sacrificed for another (a ram for Isaac; Jesus for us)
9.         Isaac’s ram was unblemished – “caught by his horns”; Jesus was the unblemished Lamb of God
10.     Both Isaac and Jesus faced death voluntarily
11.     FINAL RESULT – All nations are being blessed and the sons live on
Are we to view the willingness of Abraham to sacrifice his son as a message of faith, or as a prophecy of the coming of our Savior, Yeshua?
Abraham faced a “Paradox of Obedience”.  Should he commit murder, or should he obey Almighty God?  This is not the only such “Paradox of Obedience” in Scripture; nor is it the only one in our lives.  Moses lifted up a bronze snake on a stake in the desert; that was viewed as idolatry, the worst sin!  But he did it in obedience to God’s command in order to heal the people.  BTW – that was another foretelling of Jesus as He Himself pointed out -- “Just as Moses lifted up the snake in the desert, so the Son of Man must be lifted up, that everyone who believes in him may have eternal life.”  John 3:14-15   NIV
Athol Dickson summarized the application of these paradoxes with this statement – “Do not fear questioning God.  Do not fear idolatry.  Fear the Lord instead.”
A few classic examples of “Paradoxes of Obedience” in our daily lives:
   – Take a stand at your workplace; and risk losing the income that provides for the family.
   -- Go to church on Sunday; or respond to a friend in emergency need.
   -- Obey the Sabbath or get the neighbor’s ox out of the ditch.
 Points to ponder
How can we learn to listen to God when faced with the paradoxes of life?
How many more foretellings of Jesus can be found in the Hebrew Scriptures?
  Trust and Obey, for there is no other way…
Yosef   a.k.a.  Joe Brusherd                                               August 1, 2017

Author: “Hebraic Insights – Messages exploring the Hebrew roots of our faith” 
“Biblical Marriage”   Weekly “Hebraic Musings      www.InsightsByYosef.com

Note – Inspired and quoted from Athol Dickson’s “The Gospel according to Moses” – P.241 “Coincidences in Hebrew Scriptures”

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